Donald Trump received the backing of some of NASCAR's biggest names on the eve of the Super Tuesday contests. Trump kicked off a rally in Valdosta, Georgia Monday with appearances by NASCAR CEO Brian France and current and former drivers. (Feb. 29)
AP

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump picked up a few more endorsements Monday, this time from the NASCAR world.

NASCAR chairman and CEO Brian France appeared at a rally in Valdosta, Ga., to express support for Trump along with NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott and drivers Chase Elliott, Ryan Newman and David Ragan.

“If the people that like and watch NASCAR vote for Donald Trump, they can cancel the election right now,” Trump said to cheers. “Nobody else can win. Nobody.”

After Trump introduced France as a man who has done a “legendary” job for NASCAR, France took the microphone briefly to praise a man he’s known for more than 20 years.

“He wins with his family,” France said. “Any of his children, you’d be proud of have them as part of your family. That’s how I judge a winner, how somebody manages their family and raises their family.”

Chase Elliott, the Hendrick Motorsports rookie who replaced Jeff Gordon this season, was introduced as “the hottest young driver in the world” by Trump.

“This is a great man,” the younger Elliott said. “I think he’s a guy who can do some great things for us.”

Trump beamed at each of the endorsements, saying he could not have been happier to have a NASCAR presence at the rally.

That was certainly a departure from last July, when NASCAR pulled its Xfinity Series and Camping World Truck Series award ceremonies from a Trump resort near Miami in the wake of the businessman’s comments about Mexican immigrants.

Trump was defiant at the time, saying in a statement it was no big loss to have the banquet leave his resort and that he planned to keep the organization’s “very substantial deposit.”

“NASCAR has already apologized to me,” he said then.

Camping World CEO Marcus Lemonis had pushed for NASCAR to leave Trump’s resort in a June 30 letter to France following what Lemonis said were Trump’s “blatantly bigoted and racist” comments about Mexicans.

“Our company will not stand to support any person or organization that associates with such beliefs and we feel strongly about distancing ourselves from any negative and discriminatory comments made against any gender, ethnicity, age group or so forth,” Lemonis wrote. “I would hope that the entire NASCAR organization would agree with my sentiments.”

Several days later, NASCAR spokesman David Higdon told reporters at Daytona International Speedway the sanctioning body had been "looking at our own relationship with (Trump) and how it may have an impact and ultimately made the decision it does not make sense to continue that."